Mews reaches $2.5B valuation with fresh $300M growth round
Czech-founded hospitality software scale-up Mews has reached a valuation of around $2.5 billion after closing a new $300 million funding round led by private equity giant EQT. The deal firmly establishes Mews as one of Europe’s most valuable traveltech and software-as-a-service (SaaS) companies, underscoring investor confidence in the digital transformation of the global hotel industry.
From Prague startup to global hospitality platform
Launched in the early 2010s and founded in the Czech Republic, Mews began as a cloud-native alternative to legacy property management systems (PMS) used by hotels and accommodation providers. Traditional PMS software has long been criticised for being fragmented, on-premise, and difficult to integrate with modern tools such as online check-in, mobile keys, and dynamic pricing engines.
Mews set out to solve this by offering a cloud-based PMS built around open APIs, automation, and a marketplace of integrations. The platform enables hotels, hostels, serviced apartments, and other lodging providers to manage bookings, payments, housekeeping, rate management, and guest communication from a single interface.
Over the past decade, Mews has expanded well beyond its Central European roots, now serving thousands of properties across Europe, North America, and other key tourism markets. The company’s rapid adoption has been driven by a new generation of hotel operators pushing for digitalisation and guest-centric experiences.
Inside the EQT-led $300M round
The latest funding round, led by EQT, positions Mews among the top-tier European unicorns in the hospitality and travel technology sector. While full deal terms have not been publicly disclosed, the investment reportedly values the company at approximately $2.5 billion, up significantly from prior rounds.
EQT, a global investment firm with a strong track record in growth-stage and technology deals, is expected to support Mews in accelerating its international expansion, product roadmap, and acquisition strategy. Existing investors are also understood to have participated, further validating the company’s execution and market position.
For investors, the thesis is clear: the hospitality sector is undergoing a multi-year shift from legacy, siloed software to modern, integrated cloud platforms. With its strong growth, recurring revenues, and expanding ecosystem of partners, Mews sits at the heart of that transformation.
Why hospitality software is attracting record capital
The scale of this new round highlights how attractive hospitality technology has become to late-stage investors. Several structural trends are at play:
- Cloud migration: Hotels are moving away from on-premise systems to cloud-native solutions that are easier to update, secure, and integrate.
- Automation and labour shortages: With ongoing staffing challenges, operators are seeking automation in check-in, housekeeping, payments, and reporting.
- Guest expectations: Travellers increasingly expect seamless digital experiences, from mobile check-in to contactless payments and personalised offers.
- Data and revenue optimisation: Modern PMS platforms allow hotels to unify guest data, power revenue management, and run more targeted marketing.
By positioning itself as the core operating system for hospitality businesses, Mews benefits from strong network effects: the more partners, apps, and integrations that connect to the platform, the more valuable it becomes to hotels seeking a single source of truth for operations and guest data.
Product vision: the operating system for modern hotels
Mews’ platform goes beyond basic reservation management. It is designed as an end-to-end hospitality cloud, connecting multiple workflows and revenue streams under one roof.
Key capabilities
- Property management: Core PMS functions for reservations, room allocation, and front-desk operations.
- Integrated payments: Built-in payment processing to streamline billing, reduce errors, and support multiple payment methods.
- Housekeeping and operations: Tools to coordinate cleaning schedules, maintenance, and staff tasks in real time.
- Channel and distribution: Connectivity with online travel agencies (OTAs), direct booking engines, and distribution partners.
- Open API ecosystem: An integration marketplace for third-party tools, from revenue management systems to CRM and guest engagement apps.
This architecture allows hotel groups and independent properties to gradually modernise their tech stack without a full rip-and-replace, integrating Mews with existing tools while phasing out legacy systems over time.
Strategic priorities after the mega-round
With $300 million in fresh capital, Mews is expected to double down on several strategic initiatives:
- Global expansion: Strengthening its presence in North America and high-growth tourism markets, while consolidating leadership in Europe.
- Product development: Investing in AI-driven automation, smarter pricing, and deeper analytics to help hoteliers boost profitability.
- M&A opportunities: Acquiring complementary software providers or niche solutions to broaden the platform and accelerate customer acquisition.
- Enterprise segment: Targeting larger hotel groups and brands that require scalable, multi-property solutions.
For hotel operators, this should translate into faster innovation cycles, more integrations, and a richer set of tools to manage complex operations in an increasingly competitive market.
What the deal signals for European tech
The new valuation cements Mews as one of the standout European SaaS success stories, particularly notable given its origins in the Czech Republic rather than a traditional tech hub such as London or Berlin. It reinforces a broader pattern: high-growth, vertical-specific software platforms from Central and Eastern Europe are now competing at global scale and attracting top-tier growth equity.
For founders and investors alike, the EQT-led round demonstrates that there is ample late-stage capital available for European companies that can pair strong recurring revenue growth with clear market leadership in a large, under-digitised industry.
As the travel and hospitality sector continues to rebound and evolve, Mews’ new status as a $2.5 billion platform places it at the centre of how hotels will operate, generate revenue, and serve guests in the next decade.

